compensated dollar - meaning and definition. What is compensated dollar
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What (who) is compensated dollar - definition

FORM OF ABOLISHING SLAVERY IN WHICH FORMER SLAVEOWNERS WERE PAID
Compensated Emancipation

Dollar coin (United States)         
  • 1804 silver dollar]]
  • [[Morgan silver dollar]]
  • The [[Eisenhower dollar]] (obverse)
  • Bicentennial]] [[Commemorative coin]] (reverse)
  • The Anthony clad dollar, 1979
  • The [[American Silver Eagle]]
  • The [[Susan B. Anthony dollar]], 1999
  • The Spanish dollar was the basis of the United States silver dollar.
ONE-DOLLAR COIN ISSUED BY THE UNITED STATES
Belly button Dollar; Dollar Coins of the United States; Dollar Coin of the United States; U.S. dollar coin; Dollar (U.S. coin); Bellybutton Dollar; US dollar coin; United States $1 coin; One dollar (United States coin); United States dollar coin; Us dollar coin; Dollar coin (us); US Dollar coins; U.S. one dollar coin; Dollar (United States coin); Dollar Coin (United States); US $1 coin; United States one dollar coin; United States one-dollar coin; American loonie
The dollar coin is a United States coin with a face value of one United States dollar. Dollar coins have been minted in the United States in gold, silver, and base metal versions.
District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act         
LAW THAT ENDED SLAVERY IN THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Compensated Emancipation Act; District of Columbia Emancipation Act
An Act for the Release of certain Persons held to Service or Labor in the District of Columbia, 37th Cong., Sess.
Hong Kong one-dollar coin         
COPPER-NICKEL COIN OF 25.50 MM IN DIAMETER, 1.95 MM THICKNESS AND WEIGHING 7.10 G.
Dollar (Hong Kong coin)
The one-dollar coin is the fourth-highest and fourth-lowest denomination coin of the Hong Kong dollar.

Wikipedia

Compensated emancipation

Compensated emancipation was a method of ending slavery, under which the enslaved person's owner received compensation from the government in exchange for manumitting the slave. This could be monetary, and it could allow the owner to retain the slave for a period of labor, an indenture. Cash compensation rarely was equal to the slave's market value.

An indenture was seen as a compromise between slavery and outright emancipation, an intermediate step. However, no one was happy with compensated emancipation. Owners complained that their compensation was small compared with their loss; they were paid less, often much less, than what the slaveowner could have sold the enslaved person for (the market value). Governments and non-slaveholding citizens complained about the financial burden of compensating the owners, while for the formerly enslaved it seemed ludicrous that those who had all along benefited from slavery should now receive additional compensation, while its victims received no compensation whatsoever. Historian Eric Foner wrote, "Even Haiti, where slavery died amid a violent revolution, agreed in 1824 to pay a large indemnity to former slaveholders in exchange for French recognition of its independence.... No one proposed to compensate slaves for their years of unrequited toil." Compensation of slaveholders has been viewed as akin to compensating a thief for returning stolen property, or paying ransom to a kidnapper for releasing his victim, and therefore not so much compensation as a reward for committing what should be a crime.

To be sure, the indenture system represented for the formerly enslaved an improvement over slavery itself; those indentured could not be forcibly relocated, children and other family members could not be taken away by force, and they could no longer be whipped or raped. However, they were still not free.